Photo: Murdani Usman/CIFOR. Effects of forests on rains still under investigation
Source: IRIN
JOHANNESBURG, 8 February 2013 (IRIN) - It is commonly believed that
destroying trees will influence the climate of a region. But scientific
evidence to support that deforestation and afforestation influence local
climate - affecting temperature and rainfall - has only just started
emerging.
A new study,
led by Borbála Gálos of the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, found
that planting trees - or afforestation - in areas in Europe where there
have previously been no trees can reduce the effect of climate change
by cooling temperate regions. Using a computer-generated regional
climate model, the study showed that afforestation in the northern part
of central Europe and Ukraine could reduce temperatures by 0.3-0.5C and
increase rainfall by 10 to 15 percent during summers by 2071-2090.
While the study was specific to the temperate regions, Gálos told IRIN
that, in some regions, forests could be effectively used for
climate-change mitigation. These studies gain more importance as
drought-affected countries like Niger plan a massive afforestation
campaign that will regenerate five million hectares of dry degraded
land. Additionally, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO)
recently published a policy guide
to show that combining tree planting with crop or livestock production
could not only stem climate change but also create incomes.
Senior scientist Gordon Bonan of the US-based National Center for
Atmospheric Research, a leading authority on the influence of forests on
climate change and a contributing author to Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change (IPCC) assessments, spoke to IRIN about the status of the
research in this area.
Q: What is the scientific history of linking climate and
forests? There are studies that show conserving our existing forest
cover is imperative for keeping carbon emissions low, but the impact of
reforestation/afforestation on local climate has not been studied at
length or at a regional scale, right?
A: Scientific interest in this problem goes back
several centuries, with the European settlement of North America, India
and Australia and subsequent widespread deforestation during land
clearing. There was a common view that deforestation was altering
climate - primarily temperature and rainfall - but the scientific tools
to study this were not available until the past 30 years or so, with
global and regional climate models and satellite observations.
The most prominent example has been studies of tropical deforestation in
the Amazon. Most climate model simulations show that large-scale
conversion of tropical rainforest to pastureland creates a warmer, drier
climate. This model result is generally accepted. However, the
observational evidence for this is lacking, primarily because the model
simulations cut down all the rainforest while the observational record
is based on much less extensive deforestation. So one cannot compare the
observations with the models. Model simulations of less extensive
deforestation show a smaller effect on climate.
There was a very interesting observational study [Spracklen et al 2012 Nature 489:282-286]
that analysed satellite remote-sensing data of tropical precipitation
and vegetation. They found that for more than 60 percent of the tropical
land surface, air that has passed over extensive vegetation in the
preceding few days produces at least twice as much rain as air that has
passed over little vegetation.
Another region of extensive research is the Sahel of northern Africa:
Most modelling studies show a warmer, drier climate because of loss of
vegetation. Northern Africa was much wetter and supported lush
vegetation 6,000 years ago. Studies find that the more productive
vegetation at that time led to enhanced rainfall.
The newer research is focused on temperate latitudes in North America
and Europe, to investigate how historical deforestation altered climate
and how proposed reforestation or afforestation might affect climate.
This work is still uncertain, and one can find modelling studies showing
cooling because of deforestation or warming because of deforestation.
The response depends on the simulated change in surface albedo
[the fraction of solar energy reflected back from the Earth]: Do
forests reflect less solar radiation than cropland or grassland? If so,
the greater absorption of solar radiation by forests heats the land
surface. [Response also depends on] the hydrologic cycle: Do forests
evaporate more water than cropland or grassland? If so, greater
evaporation by forests cools the surface.
Q: When considering afforestation to mitigate climate change,
what should one take into account? The growth period of the trees, the
height, the area covered? What kind of difference it would make to
temperatures?
A: Deforestation, afforestation, reforestation and
other land-use practices are regional in scale. The affect that they
have on temperature and precipitation is seen in regional climate.
Greenhouse gas warming is a global phenomenon, well seen in the global
temperature record and also in regional temperature records. When one
compares the simulated regional effects of land use on climate with the
simulated regional greenhouse gas effect, one can find that the land use
signal is of similar magnitude.
There is much scientific uncertainty in how afforestation affects
climate - again related to albedo and evaporation. Different types of
trees or other vegetation do differ in growth rates, height, etc., all
of which affect albedo and evaporation.
A big research question is the net effect of afforestation on climate.
Forest ecosystems store carbon [reducing greenhouse gas warming], but do
they warm or cool climate because of changes in albedo and evaporation?
And how do these compare with the climate [influences] from carbon
storage? These are all very active research areas.